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Thread: American TS safety?
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20th April 2007, 05:17 PM #1SENIOR MEMBER
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American TS safety?
Hi,
Can anyone comment on the differences between safety standards in the USA & Oz in table saw use? I have been looking at a few video pod casts recently and it seems that riving knives are almost non existant in the US, and that (if the videos are anything to go by) even saw guards seem to be uncommon.
I have also seen some examples of cross cutting on the saw using the rip fence (work piece of about 50 x 75 mm being cut to about 450 mm) and no guards or splitters of any sort & the operator leaning over the saw. I had believed that this was a dangerous practice as even a slight twist from normal to the blade would jam the work piece & could cause an accident.
There also does not seem to be the same mention for the use of dado blade sets in Oz magazines as there are in the US ones.
Any comments?
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20th April 2007, 06:51 PM #2
Sshhhhh!!! We haven't told them yet!
A lot of the DVD stuff is done without guards & stuff for clarity...the riving knife stuff I don't know....would always us one no matter what. However, the sepos seem to fixated on dado blade sets. Due to ingenuity (OZ) there are probably other ways around it, but all our good suppliers list them in their cattle-dogs.
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20th April 2007, 07:20 PM #3
No Ross is right. Riving knives and the likes are very rare - in fact I've never seen one in use in the 20 plus years I was a cabinet maker in Canada and the states are the same. Blade guards are also very rare. The last time I saw one of those was back in school in 1980. Nothing wrong with a dado blade - used them for decades. Can't vouch for the idiot using them though.
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20th April 2007, 07:35 PM #4
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20th April 2007, 07:37 PM #5
Damn! I thought I'd got onto a fact.......
I wonder why the use of guards is rare.........
And me, I'd love a good dado blade set...then I can do some of those idiotic things too!!
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20th April 2007, 09:14 PM #6SENIOR MEMBER
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Here is an example of what I mean! Does not seem uncommon from the USA.
This one is from the Furnitology blog (episode 4 of the videos). http://furnitology.blogspot.com/index.html
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20th April 2007, 09:18 PM #7
Cheers Watson, you DID get onto a fact. All US table saws are sold with a blade guard and most with a splitter or riving knife. It's just that everyone removes them. Most tradies and hobbiests believe the blade guard obscures the line of sight and is more dangerous than operating without. Since the splitter is often an integral part of the blade guard, it disappears as well.
You cannot use a dado set with the guard or splitter, of course.
As for cross--cutting using the rip fence. That's very dangerous and a no-no in my book. An excellent way to launch a missile or lose a finger. There is an easy way to use a stop block on the fence before the blade to obviate this practice, but too few either know about it or use it. Often used when cutting tenons with a dado blade.
This is why the SawStop generates a lot of discussion here. Since we often eschew the safety equipment, we need another way to save a finger.Cheers,
Bob
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20th April 2007, 09:24 PM #8.
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20th April 2007, 09:31 PM #9
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20th April 2007, 09:35 PM #10.
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We have to use the Suva style guard.
I carnt remember the last time i had a guard on my saw as i reckon they are unsafe and dangerous. It is close by so when Mr Worksafe pops in i just tell em its off for cleaning
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20th April 2007, 10:04 PM #11SENIOR MEMBER
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OK - so why are the guards dangerous?
And what about splitter/riving knives?
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20th April 2007, 10:07 PM #12
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20th April 2007, 10:13 PM #13
Guards are not dangerous, improperly designed or inappropriate guards are dangerous.
Riving knives are good, I like mine and leave it fitted.
EDIT: to clarify, I classify certain pushsticks or any device used to protect you as a guard, it doesn't necessarily have to be fixed to act as a guard.
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20th April 2007, 11:10 PM #14
[QUOTE=Honorary Bloke;499031]There is an easy way to use a stop block on the fence before the blade to obviate this practice, but too few either know about it or use itQUOTE]
That's the way Nawm (Abrams, New Yankee Workshop) does it every time I've seen. Should have sunk in by now.
JoeOf course truth is stranger than fiction.
Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain
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21st April 2007, 08:51 AM #15
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